Saturday, 12 November 2016

Picture Books for young children

It was so quiet I could hear a pin drop
Written and illustrated by Andy Goodman
Princeton Architectural Press £9.99
ISBN: 978-1616894801

On the first page we see the silhouette of a child on a swing in a tree and as she swings she listens to the sounds of the world around her. Each double-page spread thereafter shows us, with clear, simple illustrations and muted colours, the things that she can hear. We start off with small sounds like bees humming and kites fluttering, but the sounds get louder, and the few words of text get bigger, as we move through the book. Who can tell where her imagination takes over from what she can actually hear? The illustrations are deceptive in their simplicity and there is gentle humour throughout. In everyday life we are constantly surrounded by sounds and this attractive book encourages the reader to take a moment to stop and really listen.
Jan Lennon

Draw It! Colour It! Creatures
Macmillan £10.00
ISBN: 978-1447290704

A fantastic collaboration of over forty top children's book illustrators including our current Children's Laureate, Chris Riddell. Each illustrator has designed at least one double-page spread, using their own style, to be coloured in, or added to by the child, giving them the opportunity to let their own imagination and creativity fly free. Some of the illustrators, such as Sarah McIntyre, choose to give instructions on how to draw something. But others leave it completely to the child to choose what to draw - on Poly Bernatene's empty plate, for example, or in Birgitta Sif’s skilfully drawn and rather fetching pair of shoes. This is a marvellous drawing activity book for children of all ages and abilities, which gives children the chance to create their own characters or to use their own level of visual literacy to interpret the clues given by the illustrators. A wonderful book.
Nicole Jordan

Bilal is very good at anything that involves the use of his wonderful imagination, but when it comes to answering factual questions his memory lets him down. He dreads the weekly test in school as he always does badly and the other pupils laugh at him. Help arrives in the form of a bee called Bumble, who appears in his bedroom one night, and it seems that suddenly all his worries are over. Bumble has no imagination, but is very good at answering questions and so, with the bee’s help, Bilal sails through the school tests. Bilal’s granny is so impressed with his newly-discovered knowledge that she encourages him to appear on a TV quiz show where she hopes he will win all the prizes. As you would expect from the brilliant Michael Rosen this story is great fun. There are lots of laughs as Bilal and Bumble quiz their way towards the final question and it almost goes without saying that Tony Ross’s brilliantly comic illustrations make us laugh even more. This is a real treat for new readers - particularly those who find tests difficult.
Jan Lennon

This is such a fabulous book. It is written almost like a TV sports programme - the contestants are introduced, their training programmes are revealed, they are interviewed before the race and the live race is broadcast. It is brilliant! The participants are Hare, a lean, mean running machine, and Tortoise - well, he’s a tortoise. No competition, you may think? The text moves at a very fast pace, just as a race commentary would. Different sized fonts show the rising excitement, or even hysteria, of the commentator, Jonny Fox. The very bright and very busy illustrations are wonderful. Children will love this book. The whole presentation is funny and fast from beginning to end. Hopefully, children will want to read the original Aesop fable, either before or after, to see what happened in the original race - this is a rematch after all.
Patricia Thompson

Titles for the Confident Reader in Primary School

Fridays with the Wizards
Written by Jessica Day George
Bloomsbury £5.99
ISBN: 978-1408858417

Fourth in the Castle Glower series. Princess Celie and her family are back safely from the Glorious Arkower and the problems which had beset them are, at last, over. They are now protected by two dozen beautiful, magical griffins, for which they have to care. All should be well, but the evil magician, Arkwright, architect of all their previous wars, has escaped the dungeons and is hiding somewhere within the castle. Celie is on high alert, determined to search all the secret passageways, behind every tapestry and beneath every trapdoor. As if that is not enough to deal with, her engaged sister, Lilah, and Prince Lulath are mooning sloppily over each other and Celie is feeling more than a bit cross and left out, as wedding preparations loom large in the castle. A lively, fast moving tale full of interesting characters and delightful magical creatures. You may be sure that it will end happily, but you will also be swept along finding out how. A pacy, positive read for confident young readers.
Tina Massey

Titles for readers Moving On from Primary to High School

Ten
Written by Shamini Flint
Allen & Unwin £5.99
ISBN: 978-1743366455

This story is narrated by Maya, a ten-year-old Indian girl. She lives in Malaysia with her Indian mother and white father. The marriage is unhappy and Maya paints a convincing picture of personal and racial tensions both at home and at school – we have a sense of the difficulties of being both mixed race and part of a minority community. The story is set in 1986 against the background of the World Cup tournament, but the main focus is a very convincing family story with a young girl trying to follow her passion for football. Maya gradually recruits her school friends to create a football team, and eventually they are able to play in a local tournament. But while football is going well, Maya’s family is falling apart. Dad decides to leave them and return to England. The story takes Maya to England too, and a final unsuccessful attempt to persuade her father back home. There are no particularly happy endings here, but strong characters, excellent pace and balance, and Maya’s sense of optimism and determination pervades the book and makes it a very positive read.
Liz Dubber

Never Evers
Written by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison
Chicken House £6.99
ISBN: 978-1910002360

The co-authors hilariously capture the emotional intensity of a school skiing trip, as an all boys’ school and an all girls’ school collide on and off the slopes in a series of misunderstanding and thwarted attempts at love. Shamed by her return to her old school after having been kicked out of ballet school, Mouse finds herself lying to new friends and hated by her old ones. Jack and his mates have made a promise to get their first kiss before the end of their trip, but nothing can prepare Jack for being the doppelgänger of a French teen popstar filming a video near their ski resort. With the unhelpful advice of their friends, Mouse and Jack find their path full of unexpected twists. Like a professional snowboarder, the writing balances a cracking pace and humour, whilst keeping innocent romance burning and, at the same time, deals effectively with a large cast of true-to-life characters. Bound to be a hit.
Benjamin Scott

The Incredible Adventures of Cinnamon Girl is a tale of comic books, apple strudel, love and the end of the world. Seventeen-year-old Alba loves her life in her quiet home town of Eden Valley. She has her whole life in front of her, hopefully pursuing a career in writing comic books, and she has her friends and family around her. But then an internet physic predicts the end of the world, announcing that the only place to survive the apocalypse is Eden Valley. As the town is besieged by those wanting to escape Armageddon, Alba realises she needs to start making decisions about her future - assuming she still has one. This is an original and quirky coming-of-age story. Alba is a likable and fun heroine, refreshingly happy and confident, at a time when many YA books are filled with doubt-filled girls, making her a good role model for teens. The possible end-of-the-world plot is interspersed with pop culture references and embarrassing parents, making it a fun read. It also has common teen worries such as leaving college and making your way in the world, along with burgeoning relationships. An enjoyable, romantic, doomsday comedy.
Jane Hall

Jess has had a traumatic year, but one September morning, just as the pain is receding and a kind of happiness is returning, she gets another shock. Eden, her best friend, goes missing. Has she run away or has she been kidnapped? Is she even still alive? The police are talking to people and searching the area, but Jess knows she cannot leave it to others to find out what has happened to her friend and she spends the day revisiting their favourite places in the West Yorkshire countryside. As she searches she relives the events of the summer and, as the hours pass, we start to understand that Eden had pain of her own. There is real tension as the hours pass and Jess’s frustration, at not being able to help her friend, grows. Teenage years are the time when we feel things, even trivial things, most deeply, but the events in Eden’s and Jess’ lives are far from trivial and they each need to find a way of accepting the painful past and moving forward. Their friendship has never been more important. A stunning debut novel.
Jan Lennon

Titles for More Mature readers

The Girl in the Blue Coat
Written by Monica Hesse
Macmillan £7.99
ISBN: 978-1447295013

Set in war-torn, Nazis-occupied Amsterdam in 1943, this is an incredibly powerful story about a young Jewish girl who goes missing from a secret room in a house where she has been hiding. Hanneke spends her days secretly finding and delivering black market goods to customers who are more than willing to pay for them. By doing this she is making a small act of rebellion against a regime that has overtaken her country and which was responsible for the death of the boy she loved. When she is initially asked to find the missing girl, she is reluctant to do so. However, she finds herself drawn into Mirjam’s story, becoming active, not only in the search for her, but in the bigger picture of the rescue of Jewish children from the journey to the concentration camps. She begins working with the resistance and finding courage that she never knew she had within her. The plot twists and turns, building the tension in the narrative and allowing the characters, particularly Hanneke, to develop and grow through their experiences. The historical detail is extremely accurate, and the section on Historical Accuracy included at the back of the book that highlights the real context of the story is extremely useful. Beautifully written, it is an unforgettable, coming-of-age story of bravery, grief and love in the most difficult, heart-wrenching times and demonstrates the lengths that some people will go to in order to help others.
Annie Everall

This is an absolutely wonderful book. Not only does it describe the discovery of the tomb, but it has pages devoted to Egyptian life in general, particularly their burial customs. Each double-page spread explains the significance of the beautiful items found in the tomb, why they are there and how they relate to the Egyptian beliefs about the afterlife. Each page includes an extract of Howard Carter's diary from when he first arrived in Egypt in 1891 until 1931 when the tomb had been cleared and all the items moved to Cairo Museum. It is a beautifully presented book and, using pop-ups and pull-tabs, represents an interactive journey through the tomb. On a practical level, on each page, there are several small blocks of text, interspersed with drawings. There is also a contents and an index page. This is a lovely book, not only for a child who already has an interest in the subject, but also for one who knows very little about Tutankhamun. (7+)
Patricia Thompson

Subtitled An interactive and fun way to explore the animal world - and that is exactly what it is. The world is divided into thirteen regions, rather than the usual continents, and each region is marked with country borders and the main geographical features. Pictures of the animals that live in that region are added and the pages are colourful and appealing. The fun and interactive parts of book are contained in a pocket attached to the inside of the front cover and there we find a poster, a huge number of animal stickers, postcards and a spotters’ guide that includes a quiz and even more amazing animal facts. This is a great introduction to maps and atlases and it offers an entertaining way to start learning about wildlife habitats, but it also has great potential for use in a learning environment as the suggested activities could be expanded to be used with more than one child. (5+)
Jan Lennon

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

This book is one of
a series which takes well-known stories and gives them a health and hygiene
twist. Pinocchio is a naughty wooden puppet who just can’t stop picking his
nose. This has disastrous consequences one day when his finger is stuffed up a
nostril and he lies to his father, Geppeto, who has asked him if he is picking
his ‘snout’. Pinocchio’s arm shoots off across the room leaving his poor old
father to patch it up. When Mr Cricket unwittingly jumps on to the puppet’s
finger and finds himself thrust up the wooden ‘hooter’, it all becomes a bit
too much. Mr Cricket convinces him to ‘kick’ the nasty habit and the good fairy
turns Pinocchio into a real boy, and they, as everyone knows, never pick their
noses! The story is completely nonsensical, but great fun, and bound to get a
few laughs from any naughty nose-pickers. Other titles in the series include Rapunzel,
Rapunzel, Wash
your Hair and Stinky Jack and the Beanstalk.

Richard Monte

School Bus Saves the
Day

Written by Peter Bently

Illustrated by Louise Conway

QED £9.99

ISBN: 978-1784930264

The school bus arrives to take a class of hedgehog children,
and their teacher Mr Hodges, to the city to see the sights and the carnival. Bright and bold illustrations show us the big
yellow bus and the class of hedgehogs enjoying the trip, and having a great
view of the carnival parade from the bus windows. But the carnival king and queen are stranded
as their float has broken down. The school bus comes to the rescue much to
everyone’s delight. At the end we get a clear illustration of the bus, labelled
with all its accessories, followed by a few pictures of other kinds of buses. This
is a great story for reading aloud and sharing. The pictures are bold enough to
be used in a group situation, and the story is a good length – short enough for
a quick bedtime story, but also with plenty of scope for embellishment and
discussion when time allows. Full colour
pages alternate with smaller coloured illustrations within a generous wide
border, and the text is well placed for readability, even on the full colour
pages. Part of the Busy Wheels series, this is an ideal read aloud for young children,
and for bus fans!

Liz
Dubber

The Prince and the
Porker

Written by Peter Bently

Illustrated by David Roberts

Andersen £11.99

ISBN: 978-1783441082

Pignatius is passing the palace when he spots ten fresh buns
cooling on a tray, and decides to eat one. However, before he realises, he has
eaten all ten and then decides to sneak into the palace to see if there are any
more. When the cook chases him he hides in a bedroom and dresses up in the
clothes he finds there. When he gets spotted, to his amazement, they think he is
the prince, as he looks just like him. He decides to make the most of this.
When the real prince turns up, Pignatius thinks the games is up, but the Prince
can see there are great advantages to having someone who can stand in for him
at times – like when Aunt Alice comes to visit each week. Peter Bently’s witty
and lively rhyme combine with David Roberts’ hilarious illustrations to create
a veritable feast of a story. The endpapers, featuring soldiers standing
proudly at the beginning and then all of a tumble at the end of the book, also
add to the humour of the book, and the richness of the language makes this
ideal for reading aloud.

Annie Everall

First Steps in reading for young children

Chu’s First Day at
School

Written by Neil Gaiman

Illustrated by Adam Rex

Bloomsbury £6.99

ISBN: 978-1408847046

Children have all kinds of anxieties on their first day at
school. Chu is worried that the other pupils
won’t like him. Of course, it all turns out fine for him and he goes home very
happily. This is a lovely, funny book that highlights, and deals with,
children’s anxieties about their first day school. Chu,
the panda, feels all the things that children often feel. The text is clear
well laid out and the illustrations are colourful, clear and wonderfully
expressive. This is an excellent book for sharing and discussing, especially
with children who are about to start school.

Patricia Thompson

Titles for the young
child just beginning to Read Alone

Lucy’s Magic Snow
Globe

Written by Anne Booth

Illustrated by Sophy Williams

OUP £4.99

ISBN: 978-0 192743312

Lucy is really looking forward to having her grandmother
stay with the family over Christmas, but now extra guests are coming, and Lucy
isn’t sure she likes the idea. However, all thoughts of tiresome extra visitors
fly out of the window when Lucy finds an injured baby rabbit on the edge of a
nearby football field. Gran, who runs an
animal sanctuary, confirms that the rabbit needs time to recover from his
injuries and regain his strength, and Lucy is sure she can care for him. The
arrival of the visitors, plus a little Christmas magic from Lucy’s snow globe,
brings Lucy’s adventure to a satisfying conclusion. Thoughtful readers will understand, as Lucy
finally does, that unexpected developments can often be for the best.

Marianne Adey

Titles for the Confident Reader in Primary School

Prince
Frog Face

Written
by Kaye Umansky

Illustrated
by Ben Whitehouse

Barrington Stoke £5.99

ISBN:
978-1781124437

In
this hilarious retelling of the well-known frog prince story, arrogant and
totally selfish Prince Valentine is auditioning for a girlfriend but he is not
having very much luck. None of the candidates meet his ultra-high standards.
Mrs Sagacity, an old woman who has wandered into the palace gardens, tries to
offer some advice on how to behave around young ladies, but, he will not
listen. He is quite rude to her and consequently gets changed into an arrogant and
selfish frog at the bottom of a well. The laughs continue as he tries to get
out of the well and back home. And, in this story, it is not a kiss that
returns our hero to his normal princely state. Kaye Umansky’s wicked sense of
humour, Ben Whitehouse’s illustrations and the tried and tested Barrington
Stoke format make a winning combination. There are also other similar
retellings of well-known stories in the series.

Jan Lennon

The Truffle Mouse

Written by Holly Webb

Illustrated by Hannah Whitty

Scholastic £5.99

ISBN: 978-1407144863

Alice’s Mum and Dad are separated and live in different
houses. She is feeling anxious about Dad’s girlfriend, Tara, and Tara’s daughter, Tilly, who are moving in. Will Tilly take
her place? Meanwhile at Mum’s house, she is finally allowed to choose a
hamster, but once at the pet shop, her eye is caught by a chocolate coloured
mouse, that soon comes home with Alice and Mum. Mum is not keen on mice, which
makes Alice worried about how Truffle will be when she is away at school and at
Dad’s - especially as her mother has a cat. So, Alice hatches a plan to take Truffle with her. The reading level of this short novel means
that children can get a sense of independence and achievement as they work
their way through the chapters. It is good to have a story for a younger age
group which considers how children feel about living between two homes and the
challenges that can bring. Framing these themes in an adventure with a new pet
means that this book never becomes bogged down in ‘issues’, but rather moves
along at a good pace. We follow Alice
to a happy ending, showing how families can rearrange themselves in a way that
can include everyone, even little brown mice.

Annalise Taylor

Alice-Miranda Shines Bright

Written by Jacqueline Harvey

Red Fox £6.99

ISBN: 978-1849418614

Anyone who hasn’t already met the
diminutive delights of Alice-Miranda is in for a treat. The tiny
boarding-school girl is faced with the mysterious and sudden disappearance of
Reginald Parker, a man in his third year of a coma and to whom Alice-Miranda
had been reading. While searching for him on her horse, she and Millie discover
gold. They promise to keep it secret in order to prevent a gold-rush destroying
the countryside, but nothing stops the Mayor from finding out and making his
own plans. In this reprint, multiple threads twist and turn to keep the reader
guessing until the very end, knowing, somehow, Alice-Miranda will make sure
everything turns out for the best. Almost too-good to be true, Alice-Miranda’s
warmth and thoughtful approach to life is pure escapist fun, perfect after a
long, tiring day at school, or to share before bed.

Benjamin Scott

Titles for readers Moving On from Primary to High School

Look
into my Eyes

Written
by Lauren Child

HarperCollins £6.99

ISBN:
978-0007334070

This
is a reprint of the first title in the popular series featuring Ruby Redfort, an
American teenager who is brilliant at cracking codes. Spectrum, a top secret intelligence agency,
recruit Ruby to be a desk agent but she is not to tell anyone. Ruby finds it hard to keep the secret from
her best friend, Clancy, who is becoming suspicious of the family's new butler,
who is really Ruby's new bodyguard.
Meanwhile, there is a plot to steal a valuable Buddha from a local bank
and Ruby and Clancy strive to crack the thieves' code. There are many different
layers in this book and young people will enjoy cracking the codes along with
Ruby, whilst feeling the tension as danger threatens Ruby's life.

Ingrid Fox

Titles for Young Teenage Readers

The Mad Apprentice

Written by Django Wexler

Corgi £6.99

ISBN: 978-0552568685

In this stunning sequel to The Forbidden Library, Alice, is still learning her craft. Set
magical and dangerous tasks by her ancient and powerful Reader, she must use
all her wits, and test her courage to the limits, to defeat the increasingly
aggressive and unpredictable monsters she encounters, so absorbing to herself
the powers of the creatures she masters. Alice
is commanded, along with other Readers’ apprentices, to bring back, dead or
alive, the rogue apprentice, Jacob, who has, unthinkably, murdered his Reader
master. This unenviable task involves Alice, the natural leader of the group,
in a horrendous, rolling sequence of battles against nightmarish monsters
within a black, boundless labyrinth which constantly changes its configuration.
As the terrifying battles rage on, Alice
must protect and manage her apprentice group, using every ounce of her will and
intellect to summon up creatures and situations to defeat her enemies and so get
closer to discovering what caused her father’s death. Heart-stopping, vivid,
complex, intelligent and questioning, this novel would make a brilliant film.
Young teenage readers will welcome the occasional quiet, reflective stretches
in order to unclench their stomach muscles and exhale!

Tina Massey

Titles for More Mature readers

Demon
Road

Written
by Derek Landy

HarperCollins £14.99

ISBN:
978-0008140816

This
512 page novel, the first in a new trilogy, has a cover which will immediately
draw the reader in. It is packed with terrifying action, witty dialogue, undead
serial killers, vampires, killer cars and demons. Amber is sixteen years old, a
normal American teenager, albeit with weird parents, until the day she is attacked
by two youths outside the diner. Her parents and their friends reveal
themselves to be what they really are and Amber is forced to go on the run -
away from the very people she thought loved and cared for her. The opening
sentence of the book sets the scene, " Twelve hours before Amber Lamont's
parents tried to kill her..."The book is fast
and scary but will be enjoyed by all teenagers and fans of Derek Landy. This is real horror story, a ‘head
under the duvet’ storyline, with the sequel out next
year.

Ingrid Fox

Information
Titles

How Many Greeks Can You Fit Inside a Horse?

Written by Chris Mitchell

John Blake £5.99

ISBN: 978-1784186548

A talking T-Rex, Dr Dino, might not be the obvious choice to
explore “bizarre stories of ridiculous gods”, but this disbelieving dinosaur
narrator does cleverly present a funny and engaging collection of international
myths and legends. The legends are told within the context of their national
identity, from the legend of St. George for the English to how the Maori
explained the birth of New
Zealand. Some tales are quite gruesome, like
the skinless horse-man of Orkney, while others are fascinating, like why the
Aztecs believed they were helping the gods with their human sacrifices. This
superb and short overview of a wide range of cultural beliefs and stories will
kick start the imagination of young readers. Part of the Dr Dino’s Learnatorium series that includes more scientific topics,
such as Do Astronauts Wee in Space?

(8+)

Benjamin Scott

Will’s Words

Written by Jane Sutcliffe

Illustrated by John Shelley

Charlesbridge

ISBN: 978-1580896382

This lavishly illustrated
information picture book provides a distinctive and entertaining approach to
introducing Shakespeare to a young audience.
Each double page spread is deployed to both conjure up the atmosphere of
London theatre
-going in Shakespeare’s time as well as examining well known words and phrases
whose origin can be discovered in his plays. The left hand side of each page
cleverly incorporates the expressions into the description of an aspect of life
at the Globe theatre, while the right hand side contains scrolls which explain
the terms and locates them in the plays. Amongst the varied colourful phrases
included are, “Eaten out of house and home”, “Wild-goose chase” and “cold-blooded”. However it is the intricate and wonderfully
observed illustrations that set this book apart. Readers of all ages will
delight in the various depictions of theatre goers at the Globe and the
birds-eye view of London.
A lovely title to have on your shelves.